I learned a few years ago that it’s risky
to talk about guns: I penned a column
asking if Jesus would join the NRA, if he would go to a gun show and drool over
the quality of the firearms. I didn’t
even answer Yes or No – but merely raising the question elicited hate mail, and
threatening calls to my home.
But it is riskier
for us, the people, and for the next round of victims, to let the memory of executed
children in Newtown slip from our attention, or become yet one more casualty of
powerful lobbying and political timidity.
I wonder if we
could agree to a modest proposal: let’s
call it the Sandy Hook rule. If a movie
or TV show displays the killing of 26 or more people, the show is banned. Different from banning guns, right? Or, assuming we can’t get that done (as a
bevy of Hollywood lawyers would shoot that down swiftly), what if we, the good
citizens who shed a tear or two when we watched the news from Newtown, simply
turn off the TV when the firing begins, or don’t plunk down $10 to watch a
movie we’ve been fully informed well in advance is in fact about mass murder,
which we just shed a tear or two about on December 14.
I mean, if a film
exhibited the shooting of 25, or 17, or 3, maybe that’s really more than we
should be able to stomach. But the
shootings in most successful movies number in the dozens – or you just lose
count. Last movie I went to, people near
me giggled and actually clapped when a gunman mowed down 15 or 20 people in
just one scene. The glamorization of violence.
I can get people to nod if I say There’s too
much violence on the screen! But if
those of us who were sad last month would (in memory of the Sandy Hook
children) turn it off or refuse to purchase movie tickets for films with dozens
of gun killings, they wouldn’t show it, or even produce it. It’s in our power to clean it up.
And the mentally ill wouldn’t be able to see
it either. There’s a topic for another
day: what are we willing, and even eager
to do to help the mentally ill and their families?
After the Newtown
executions, I said in my next sermon that perhaps we can agree on another modest
proposal, based on something I’m 100% sure is correct: Jesus does not like automatic weapons – so
let’s not tolerate them any more: the
other Sandy Hook rule, in memory of the children. I won’t waste our time by venturing an
opinion on guns in general. The droning
of the gun lobby is boringly familiar, making me yawn, or grow ill. The 2nd amendment! Guns don’t kill, people kill! We need more guns, not fewer, to defend
ourselves! Let’s arm the teachers! I interviewed a dozen teachers after this
crazed notion got traction last month, and to a person they said they would
quit before they would agree to manage a gun every day with children in the
room.
The NRA has said
they won’t budge an inch – and they declare this within hours of a brutal
massacre. This strikes many of us as
obscene. We must have rapid fire
weapons! or we won’t be Americans! or We won’t vote for you! or We won’t contribute!
or We’ll get mad! Please. Is this good citizenship? Must gun rights be all or nothing? I’ve yet to hear anyone explain how automatic
weapons contribute to the good of society.
The time has come for some baby steps, like
my Sandy Hook rule, and the other Sandy Hook rule, before we lose more babies. Remember the children rule.